01854pab a2200205 454500008004000000100001900040245007200059260000900131300001500140362000800155520121600163650002801379650002401407650001201431700002201443773004801465909001101513999001901524952010501543180718b2015 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aWalters, James aHousing in a federation: from wicked problem to complexity cascade? c2015 ap.448-466. aDec aThe Commonwealth's periodic attempts at housing and urban policy reform since the 1940s have been made in the face of a federal structure that allocates responsibility for such matters to the states. This paper explores the experience of federal governments since the 1940s, considering the various styles of political leadership, varying ways in which the problem has been framed, and differing policy settings that have been employed in resolving policy challenges. The historical narrative clarifies phases of active engagement and reaction, linking these to fiscal asymmetry and distribution of federal state responsibilities, historical gateway events, and transitions in policy paradigms. We argue that housing is a perpetual concern (both a basic need and an aspirational objective) and is so integrally related to other policy domains in which decisions may have unintended consequences for housing that it is never conclusively resolved. The complexity (and uncertainty) consequent upon these inter -relationships ensures that housing remains a wicked problem. The visual metaphor of a complexity cascade, however, may assist a more nuanced appreciation of the direction of policy travel. - Reproduced. aFederalism - Australia  aHousing - Australia aHousing aHolbrook, Carolyn aAustralian Journal of Public Administration a110035 c110030d110030 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 74, Issue no: 4pAR110495r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR